Medianoche Bread is an enriched yeast bread made with eggs, butter, bread flour, and yeast that’s popular in the Hispanic Caribbean. The famous medianoche sandwich uses this bread as its base, but it’s just as good when enjoyed on its own. This recipe results in the fluffiest, best-tasting medianoche loaf I’ve ever had. After one bite of this heavenly bread, I’m sure you’ll agree with me.
What Is Medianoche Bread?
Medianoche bread, “midnight bread” in English, is a soft egg bread similar to challah or brioche. The bread has a soft, yellow interior that feels like you’re biting into a pillow, only less disturbing. Medianoche bread has the same sweetness as Puerto Rican Pan Sobao, but because it contains eggs, it is more yellow in appearance. The crust of this bread is also like pan sobao: soft and chewy.
The medianoche sandwich originated in Cuba and is made with this bread. A medianoche sandwich is very similar to the Puerto Rican Tripleta or the Floridian Cubano sandwich. The sandwich got its name because it was popular for Cubans to eat after a late night of partying.
What Ingredients Are In Medianoche Bread?
To make medianoche bread, you need bread flour, whole milk, eggs, active dry yeast, granulated sugar, unsalted butter, and kosher salt. While you can use all-purpose flour instead of the bread flour, the results won’t be as chewy as they should be. You can replace the unsalted butter with salted butter if that’s all you have. Just reduce the kosher salt in the recipe to 3/4 teaspoon (4.5 grams).
I knead this bread dough by hand after mixing the butter and sugar with an electric hand mixer, but you can mix it in a stand mixer if you prefer.
Can I Use Instant Yeast Instead Of Active Dry?
Begin by blooming the active dry yeast in a small bowl with warm (110°F or 40°C) milk and a pinch of granulated sugar. Blooming yeast just means you’re waking up with warm milk. The sugar gives the yeast something to feed on, which jumpstarts its activation. Check the yeast mixture after 5 minutes. The mixture will bubble, foam, and move around in the bowl. If you don’t see any signs of life after 5 minutes, you’ll need to restart the activation process with new yeast. Once you know the yeast is alive and kicking, you can begin the rest of the bread dough.
You can replace the active dry yeast in this recipe with an equal amount of instant yeast. You don’t need to bloom instant yeast the same way because it’s broken down and manufactured to be added directly to the dry ingredients (the flour) in the recipe.
Use an electric hand mixer to blend the room-temperature butter, sugar, and salt at medium-low speed. Increase the mixing speed to medium once the mixture forms a gritty paste and blend for another 3 minutes.
Stop the mixer and scrape down the bowl and beaters. Next, add the room-temperature eggs, one at a time, blending them in at low speed until combined. Once all the eggs are added, stop the mixer and scrape down the bowl and beaters.
Can I Make Medianoche Bread Dough In A Stand Mixer?
Next, add the yeast-milk mixture and 1 cup (130 grams) of the bread flour and blend them in at low speed. Add another cup of flour and blend in until the mixer starts getting angry with you. This is your indication to turn the dough out and knead by hand.
Pour the remaining flour onto a clean countertop and scrape the dough mixture into the center of the flour. Using your hands, vigorously knead the dough, mixing the flour in with each turn. Add more flour, as needed, if the dough sticks to the countertop. Depending on the weather and humidity, you will use a total of 3 1/4- 3 1/2 cups (420-485 grams) of bread flour for this dough. The dough should be soft and supple and not sticky.
You can also make medianoche bread dough in a stand mixer:
- Add the butter, sugar, and salt to the bowl of a stand mixer. Blend these ingredients together at speed 2 (on a KitchenAid) for 3 minutes using the paddle attachment.
- Stop the mixer, scrape down the bowl and paddle, then add the eggs, one at a time, at low speed. Once the eggs are incorporated, stop the mixer and scrape it down again.
- Add 1 (130 grams) cup of the bread flour with the yeast-milk mixture and blend at low speed until a thick batter forms.
- Scrape down the bowl and paddle and switch to the dough hook.
- Add the remaining flour, a cup at a time, while you knead the dough at 2nd speed. Continue kneading the dough for 10 minutes.
How Long Do I Have To Let The Dough Rise?
Lightly grease a bowl with canola or vegetable oil and spin the ball of dough in the bowl to oil it completely. Cover the bowl with a clean kitchen towel or plastic wrap and put it in a warm, draft-free area of your kitchen. The microwave or a cold oven is the perfect place for this.
Allow the medianoche dough to rise for 1 hour or until doubled in bulk.
Can I Make The Dough A Day (Or Two) Ahead?
Punch the dough to dispel the gases that built up during this first rise.
Form the dough into an 18-20-inch (45-50cm) log by pressing the ball in between the palms of your hands. Push it from left to right and back again, ensuring the fleshy part of your palms stays in contact with the countertop. As you press, the dough will form into a tube.
Now, you can continue with the recipe or lay it onto a lightly greased sheetpan and refrigerate it for 24 hours. The longer it chills, the deeper the flavor will be, but I don’t recommend refrigerating it for more than 24 hours.
You can also freeze it at this point. Just put the formed loaf on the sheetpan into the freezer. Once the medianoche loaf is frozen, wrap it in two layers of plastic film and a layer of heavy-duty aluminum foil. Freeze the raw dough for 3 months. You can thaw the dough in the fridge the day before you bake it. Once thawed, unwrap it and allow it to go through the second rise as described below.
Can I Make This Into Smaller Loaves?
You can also form the medianoche dough into 4 4-ounce (115g) hoagie rolls. Divide the dough into four equal portions and use the same technique to shape the dough.
After shaping the dough, transfer it to a parchment-lined sheetpan. Cover the medianoche dough with a clean towel and allow it to rise in a warm, draft-free area for 45 minutes. The dough will swell but may not rise to double its volume this time.
While the dough rises, arrange your oven racks so that one is in the middle position and one is in the very bottom position (or rack). Heat your oven to 350°F (180°C). After turning on the oven, boil 3 cups of water in a saucepot over medium heat. This will create a steamy environment in which to bake the medianoche bread. Once the water in the pot comes to a boil, carefully transfer it to the corner on the bottom rack of your oven.
How Do I Finish The Medianoche Bread?
An egg wash gives the medianoche bread a glossy, golden-brown appearance. All you need for it is a large egg yolk and cold water.
After you set up the steam oven, add the egg yolk and the cold water to a small bowl. Use a fork or a small whisk to beat the egg yolk and water to make an egg wash. Once smooth, you can use it on any bread dough or pie crust you want to look shiny.
Can I Replace The Egg Wash With Something Else?
Using a pastry brush, brush the egg wash over the medianoche dough after its final rise.
If you don’t have any more eggs, you can brush whole milk over the dough instead. The exterior won’t be as brown or shiny as with an egg wash, but it’ll give some color to the bread.
How Long Does It Take To Bake Medianoche Bread?
Bake the medianoche bread in the 350°F (180°C) oven for 25-30 minutes or until a deep golden brown. Smaller loaves may bake in 15-20 minutes, so keep an eye on them around the 15 minute mark.
The bread loaf will sound hollow when you thump it with your fingers.
Why Do I Need To Cover The Baked Medianoche Loaf?
Remove the pan from the oven. Immediately after removing the medianoche bread from the oven, cover it with a clean kitchen towel to trap the steam, which keeps the crust soft. Allow the bread to cool under the towel for 15 minutes.
After 15 minutes, remove the towel and transfer the medianoche bread to a wire rack to cool completely.
How Do I Serve It?
Use this medianoche bread to make these Tripletas, your favorite Cubano sandwich, or any other sandwich you like. It also makes a great bread pudding or French toast.
My family and I love to toast it, spread some salted butter, and enjoy it with café con leche. Just slice and serve to enjoy it simply.
How Do I Store Leftovers?
Store leftover medianoche bread in a bread bag or wrapped in plastic wrap. Wrapping the bread retains its soft texture and keeps the flavor fresh.
Store baked medianoche bread at room temperature for 5-7 days. I don’t recommend refrigerating baked bread because the chilled air causes it to go stale faster.
Can I Freeze It After Baking?
You can freeze baked medianoche bread for 3 months. Allow the bread to cool completely, then wrap it in two layers of plastic wrap and a layer of heavy-duty aluminum foil. To thaw it, remove the foil wrapping and let it thaw at room temperature before removing the plastic wrap. I always toast previously frozen medianoche bread to give it a freshly baked flavor.
This Medianoche Bread is simple to make, and its rich, buttery, slightly sweet flavor is addictive. You may have found your new favorite sandwich bread in this recipe, so pin it to your bread board for easy finding later. Let me know your thoughts in the comments, and share this post with your bread-loving friends.
Medianoche Bread
at Sense & EdibilityEquipment
- electric hand mixer or a stand mixer
- pastry brush
- half sheetpan
Ingredients
For the Medianoche Bread
- 2 1/4 teaspoons (8 grams) active dry yeast
- 1/3 cup (65 grams) granulated sugar separated
- 2/3 cup (140 milliliters) whole milk warmed to 110°F (40°C)
- 1/4 cup (1/2 stick or 57 grams) unsalted butter room temperature
- 2 large eggs room temperature
- 1 teaspoon (6 grams) kosher salt
- 3 1/4-3 1/2 cups (420-485 grams) bread flour plus more as needed for kneading and forming
For the Egg Wash
- 1 large egg yolk
- 1 tablespoon (15 milliliters) cold water
Instructions
Bloom the Yeast
- In a small bowl, bloom the active dry yeast in the warm milk with 1/2 teaspoon of the granulated sugar. Check the yeast mixture after 5 minutes. If you don't see any signs of life– bubbles, foam, or movement in the bowl– after 5 minutes, you'll need to restart the activation process with new yeast. Begin mixing the bread dough once you see the yeast moving.
Mix the Medianoche Bread Dough
- Use an electric hand mixer to blend the room-temperature butter, sugar, and salt in a large bowl at medium-low speed. Increase the mixing speed to medium once the mixture forms a gritty paste and blend for another 3 minutes.
- Stop the mixer and scrape down the bowl and beaters. Add the room-temperature eggs, one at a time, blending them in at low speed until combined. Once all the eggs are added, stop the mixer and scrape down the bowl and beaters.
- Next, add the yeast-milk mixture and 1 cup (130 grams) of the bread flour and blend them in at low speed. Add another cup of flour and blend in until the mixer starts slowing down. This is your indication to turn the dough out and knead by hand.
Knead the Bread Dough
- Pour the remaining flour onto a clean countertop and scrape the dough mixture into the center of the flour. Using your hands, vigorously knead the dough, mixing the flour in with each turn. Add more flour, as needed, if the dough sticks to the countertop. Knead the aggressively for a full 10 minutes.The dough should be soft and supple and not sticky.
Let the Dough Rise
- Lightly grease a bowl with canola or vegetable oil and spin the ball of dough in the bowl to oil it completely. Cover the bowl with a clean kitchen towel or plastic wrap and put it in a warm, draft-free area of your kitchen.Allow the medianoche dough to rise for 1 hour or until doubled in bulk.
Form the Dough and Give It Another Rise
- Punch the dough to dispel the gases that built up during this first rise. Form the dough into an 18 to 20-inch (45-50cm) log by pressing the ball in between the palms of your hands. Push it from left to right and back again, ensuring the fleshy part of your palms stays in contact with the countertop. As you press, the dough will form into a tube.
- After shaping the dough, transfer it to a parchment-lined sheetpan. Cover the medianoche dough with a clean towel and allow it to rise in a warm, draft-free area for 45 minutes. The dough will swell but may not rise to double its volume this time.
Prepare the Oven
- While the dough rises, arrange your oven racks so that one is in the middle position and one is in the very bottom position (or rack). Heat your oven to 350°F (180°C). After turning on the oven, boil 3 cups (710 milliiters) of water in a saucepot over medium heat. Once the water in the pot comes to a boil, carefully transfer it to the corner on the bottom rack of your oven.
Make the Egg Wash
- After you set up the steam oven, add the egg yolk and the cold water to a small bowl. Use a fork or a small whisk to beat the egg yolk and water until it runs smooth.
Bake the Medianoche Bread
- Using a pastry brush, brush the egg wash over the medianoche dough after its final rise.
- Bake the medianoche bread in the 350°F (180°C) oven for 25-30 minutes or until a deep golden brown. The bread loaf will sound hollow when you thump it with your fingers.
- Remove the pan from the oven. Immediately after removing the medianoche bread from the oven, cover it with a clean kitchen towel to trap the steam. Allow the bread to cool under the towel for 15 minutes.
- After 15 minutes, remove the towel and transfer the medianoche bread to a wire rack to cool completely.
- Use this medianoche bread to make these Tripletas, your favorite Cubano sandwich, or any other sandwich you like. It also makes a great bread pudding or French toast.
Notes
- Use the same amount of all-purpose flour instead of the bread flour, but the results won't be as chewy as they should be.
- Replace the unsalted butter with salted butter if that's all you have. Just reduce the kosher salt in the recipe to 3/4 teaspoon (4.5 grams).
- You can replace the active dry yeast in this recipe with an equal amount of instant yeast but don't bloom it and add it with the first cup of bread flour.
- You can also form the medianoche dough into 4 4-ounce (115g) hoagie rolls. Divide the dough into four equal portions and use the same technique to shape the dough.
- If you don't have any more eggs, you can brush whole milk over the dough instead of using an egg wash.
- Add the butter, sugar, and salt to the bowl of a stand mixer. Blend these ingredients together at speed 2 (on a KitchenAid) for 3 minutes using the paddle attachment.
- Stop the mixer, scrape down the bowl and paddle, then add the eggs, one at a time, at low speed. Once the eggs are incorporated, stop the mixer and scrape it down again.
- Add 1 (130 grams) cup of the bread flour with the yeast-milk mixture and blend at low speed until a thick batter forms. Scrape down the bowl and paddle and switch to the dough hook.
- Add the remaining flour, a cup at a time, while you knead the dough at 2nd speed. Continue kneading the dough, after all of the flour is added, for 10 minutes.
- I knead this bread dough by hand after mixing the butter and sugar with an electric hand mixer, but you can mix it in a stand mixer if you prefer.
- Depending on the weather and humidity, you will use a total of 3 1/4- 3 1/2 cups (420-485 grams) of bread flour (or even a little more if it's really humid) for this dough.
- The microwave or a cold oven is the perfect place for rising bread dough.
- You can lay the formed bread dough onto a lightly greased sheetpan and refrigerate it for 24 hours. The longer it chills, the deeper the flavor will be, but I don't recommend refrigerating it for more than 24 hours. Chilled dough will also need an additional hour of rising time.
- Smaller loaves may bake in 15-18 minutes, so keep an eye on them around the 15 minute mark.
- Store leftover medianoche bread in a bread bag or wrapped in plastic wrap to retain its soft texture and keep the flavor fresh.
- Store it at room temperature for 5-7 days. Avoid refrigerating baked bread because the chilled air causes it to go stale faster.
- Before Baking:
- Put the unbaked formed loaf on the sheetpan into the freezer before its second rise.
- Once frozen, wrap it in two layers of plastic film and a layer of heavy-duty aluminum foil.
- Freeze the raw dough for 3 months.
- Thaw the dough in the fridge the day before you bake it. Once it's thawed, unwrap it and allow it to go through the second rise as instructed.
- After Baking:
- Allow the bread to cool completely, then wrap it in two layers of plastic wrap and a layer of heavy-duty aluminum foil.
- Freeze the baked medianoche bread for up to 3 months.
- To thaw: remove the foil wrapping and thaw at room temperature before removing the plastic wrap.
- Toast previously frozen bread to give it a freshly baked flavor.
Thanks for including grams! I’m too scared to try bread recipes without them. Those and your notes helped me produce a medianoche bread loaf just a beautiful as yours! And it’s SO good. Thanks!
You’re welcome, Erin!
I’ve never heard of medianoche bread but it looks amazing! I can’t wait to try it.
I know you’ll love it, Dennis!
I love making bread, but this is my first time making medianoche bread. It turned out perfect! This reminds me a lot of brioche. I plan to make some sandwiches and maybe even French toast. Thanks for another awesome recipe!
Those are great recipes to use them for, Krysten. Enjoy!
I followed your recipe to make two medianoche bread loaves. One for now and one to freeze and we have already torn through the first one! So next time, I’m making four!
At least yours made it to the freezer. Our second one sometimes doesn’t!
This medianoche bread was so delicious! So much better than store bought. I’m definitely going to be making this more often.
It tastes so much better and making it is therapeutic, Lauren. Thank you!
I love baking bread, especially the aroma of the yeast. This medianiche bread looks fantastic. Perfect for sandwiches, and toasted for breakfast too.
I love eating it tasted & buttered with my coffee for breakfast, Gloria.